~ So I had tat sitting number 3 today... and lets just say I was a big fat wuss. I only lasted an hour and half today and we didnt get through much.... but hey progress is progress and even though mine is ever so slowwwwwwwwwww........ This tat will be kick ass when it is finished and colored.... GUESS WHAT??? ONLY TWO MORE OUTLINING SESSIONS!!!!!!! YIPPIEEEEEEEE!!!!

Here are pics from today after getting home.... icky, red, swollen, and gooey....

And here it is...nice and pretty fresh out of the shower....

OK SO LETS RECAP
~ TAT SITTING NUMBER ONE:

~TAT SITTING NUMBER 2

~AND TAT SITTING NUMBER 3

Moving on.......
Over the weekend I went home to my Dad's and Step Mom's house with my sister to celebrate My sister's Birthday, My brother's birthday AND Father's Day, all of whihc fall in the Month of June..... well while home my step mom and dad decided to take me and my sis with my adopted sis out to a farm to see baby puppies. They decided to get my lil sis a puppy now that she is getting a little older and has been asking for one. We have always had boxers growing up as children... so you can only believe this is what my dad wanted for Madie.... so here are all the adorable pics from our trip to see Duke.... that is what they are naming him. They get to bring him home in 3 weeks. SOOOOOO SOOOOO SOOOO MUCH FUN.
I MEAN LETS FACE IT....ARENT THEY JUST THE CUTEST THINGS YOU HAVE SEEN??

~ I have a photoshot this Friday with Anatomik.... I am sooo sooo excited to see them both again as we have not shot in a few months!!!!! I am super excited for this set!!! Hopefully it turns out great!

Last but not least.... here is the dose of Random Fun facts.......

I looked up top money making movies and here is the top 20... I found this interesting

INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT MONEY:
~$1 bills wear out in about 17 months. If you were to stack all the worn out dollar bills for one year, they would reach 200 miles in the air. Bills of larger denomination last longer because they are used less. Several billion notes per year are currently being printed. To keep up with demand, the Bureau of Engraving and Printing often keeps its currency presses running day and night. These presses are located at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing in Washington, DC and Fort Worth, TX.

~A $1 bill costs about 3 cents to make, and a $100 bill costs the same. Security at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing is extremely tight. There are several hundred closed-circuit video cameras, several thousand alarms, and an army of security officers. Obviously there are not many windows.

~The paper for money is made specially for the Bureau by a Massachusetts paper maker and is shipped to Washington and Fort Worth by armored truck. Possession of the blank paper by outsiders is a federal crime. Genuine currency paper is one quarter linen and three quarters cotton.

~The Office of Currency Standards at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing provides a free public service for those people who have been careless with their money. Their specially trained currency examiners armed with small tools pick through mutilated money searching for redeemable currency. If they can find 51% of a bill, they will redeem it.

~Though best known for protecting presidents, the U.S. Secret Service first set up shop in 1865 specifically to combat counterfeiting. At the time, between one third and one half of all paper money was thought to be phony. That proportion has dropped considerably, but computers and new copy machines have created new challenges for the Secret Service. As usual, however, they keep several steps ahead of counterfeiters.
(INFORMATION TAKEN FROM: http://www.oldcash.com/history.html)

~The Bureau of Engraving and Printing produces 38 million notes a day with a face value of approximately $541 million.

~95% of the notes printed each year are used to replace notes already in circulation. 48% of the notes printed are $1 notes.

~If you had 10 billion $1 notes and spent one every second of every day, it would require 317 years for you to go broke.

~Currency paper is composed of 25% linen and 75% cotton. Red and blue synthetic fibers of various lengths are distributed evenly throughout the paper. Prior to World War I the fibers were made of silk.

~Have you ever wondered how many times you could fold a piece of currency before it would tear? About 4,000 double folds (first forward and then backwards) are required before a note will tear.

~The 100 dollar note has been the largest denomination of currency in circulation since 1969.

~The legend, "In God We Trust," became a part of the design of United States currency in 1957 and has appeared on all currency since 1963.

~Contrary to popular belief, the automobile pictured on the back of the $10 note is not a Model "T" Ford. It is merely a creation of the designer of the bill.

~Martha Washington is the only woman whose portrait has appeared on a U.S. currency note. It appeared on the face of the $1 Silver Certificate of 1886 and 1891, and the back of the $1 Silver Certificate of 1896.
(INFORMATION TAKEN FROM: http://www.soundvision.com/Info/life/facts.asp)

SORRY FOR SUCH A LONG BLOG... BUT I HOPE YOU ENJOY!!!! HAVE A GREAT WEEK AND UNTIL NEXT TIME HUGS AND KISSES!!!!